Honoring the sacrifice of Vietnam vets, The Wall That Heals to go on display in Delaware

The Wall That Heals, a traveling replica of the Vietnam Veterans Memorial, is returning to Delaware on Tuesday.

The Vietnam War memorial will be escorted by Delaware State Police and veterans on motorcycles to New Castle where it will be met by students and volunteers at Southern Elementary School around 1:45 p.m. on Tuesday and William Penn High school around 2:30 p.m.

Therea Orecchia, of Wilmington, points to the name of her husband Edwin G. Northup on The Wall That Heals Thursday morning near New Castle.  Therea said Edwin was killed in 1972 in a helicopter crash during a rescue mission in Vietnam.
Therea Orecchia, of Wilmington, points to the name of her husband Edwin G. Northup on The Wall That Heals Thursday morning near New Castle. Therea said Edwin was killed in 1972 in a helicopter crash during a rescue mission in Vietnam.

The Wall That Heals is a mobile exhibit that features a three-quarter scale replica of the Vietnam Veteran’s Memorial in Washington, D.C.

The exhibit comes to New Castle from Knoxville, Tennessee, having visited Bay St. Louis, Missouri; Garner, North Carolina; and Crawfordsville, Arkansas, as the first few stops of the 2022 tour.

The replica was built in 1996 and stands 7 feet 6 inches high at its tallest point and is 375 feet in length. Similar to the original, it is erected in a chevron shape and allows visitors to do name rubbings of individual service members’ names. Visitors can also experience The Wall rising above them as they walk toward the apex, a key feature of the Washington memorial.

Tom Lauppe, of Middletown, takes a rubbing of William H. Thigpen's name from The Wall That Heals Thursday morning near New Castle.  Thomas and William were friends and classmates while they were growing up in North Carolina.
Tom Lauppe, of Middletown, takes a rubbing of William H. Thigpen's name from The Wall That Heals Thursday morning near New Castle. Thomas and William were friends and classmates while they were growing up in North Carolina.

The Wall consists of 140 numbered panels that hold more than 58,000 names, illuminated by LED lighting for day and night visibility.

The names are listed by day of casualty and begin at the center/apex, with names starting on the East Wall, on the right, and working their way out to the end of that wing before picking up at the far end of the West Wall, on the left.

From there, the names work their way back to the center/apex, symbolically joining the beginning and end of the conflict.

After arriving at William Penn High School, the first school on this year's tour to host the wall, the setup will begin on Wednesday.

The Wall will be open to the public 24 hours a day, starting Thursday and ending Sunday at 2 p.m.

More than 100 volunteers are needed to guard the wall, help with parking and assist with events over the next few days.

On Thursday, an opening ceremony begins at 9 a.m. with a Prisoner of War keynote speaker.

A candlelight vigil will be held at 8 p.m. Saturday to read the names of Hometown Heroes from the exhibit with a procession along the wall and a 21-gun salute.

Thomas and Suzanne Grzybowski, of New Castle, take a rubbing of Michael DiPasquantonio's name from The Wall That Heals Thursday morning near New Castle.  Thomas grew up with DiPasquantonio, who was killed in the Vietnam War, in Wilmington's Browntown area.
Thomas and Suzanne Grzybowski, of New Castle, take a rubbing of Michael DiPasquantonio's name from The Wall That Heals Thursday morning near New Castle. Thomas grew up with DiPasquantonio, who was killed in the Vietnam War, in Wilmington's Browntown area.

There will also be a keynote address from retired Maj. Gen. Frank Vavala and a reading of "In Memory" names.

The exhibit previously visited Delaware at the Legislative Hall in Dover in 1998 and at Delaware Technical Community College’s Owens Campus in 2016.

The Wall That Heals serves as a way for “the souls enshrined on the Memorial to exist once more among family and friends in the peace and comfort of familiar surroundings,” according to the memorial’s website.

The traveling exhibit also eases the healing process by allowing veterans who have been unable to visit the memorial in Washington to face The Wall within their own communities.

In 2021, The Wall That Heals traveled over 13,000 miles and visited 26 communities, escorted by more than 3,000 vehicles. Tours of the exhibit were provided to upward of 12,000 students, and The Wall was visited by almost 200,000 people.

To volunteer

If you would like to be a volunteer for The Wall That Heals in Delaware, visit www.colonialschooldistrict.org/williampenn/the-wall-that-heals/ and click "volunteer."

This article originally appeared on Delaware News Journal: A Vietnam Veterans Memorial mobile exhibit is coming to Delaware